quiche


quiche
Originally uploaded by dumin.

I was bored so I made a quiche. I used the reserved and frozen portion of the pate brisee I had prepared for my blueberry tarts for the crust.

I cooked half a white onion in butter on the stove. I then added chopped broccoli, cherry tomatoes, and chopped green bell pepper to the pan and covered it to steam the other vegetables.

I then combined three eggs, 3/4 C of heavy cream, and 1/2 C of finely shredded cheddar and bleu cheese. I beat these together and seasoned with salt and pepper as well as a pinch of nutmeg and a pinch of cayenne.

I then salted and peppered the steaming vegetables and added a pinch of nutmeg to them as well.

I then arranged the vegetable mixture in the bottom of the unbaked pie shell and poured the egg-cream mixture over it all. Finally, I sprinkled about a T of slivered almonds on top before baking the quiche for 50 minutes in a 350F preheated oven.

I used a silicone baking dish that my mother gave me to bake this. I had never used one before and I have to admit I was wary of them. Other than the slightly gas-like smell they seem to give off while they bake, I had no real complaints. In fact, it turned out quite well.

Question: Has anyone else used any of this silicone bake ware and what was your impression?

I’m still a little sketched out by them for some reason and I always kind of feel as though I am cheating whenever I use some fancy new product that does not seem ‘traditional’ to me.

show hide 4 comments

Anonymous - At 1/24/2005 08:14:45 PM, Chefsf said…
i use a “silpat” that’s made in France. It acts like parchment paper. great for cookies, or cooking with anything that’s sticky or messy-silpats don’t stick.
you can find them at novelty cooking stores-im sure you already have your favorites!, for about 20-30 bucks a pop. I love mine. I use it when baking pies for the spill over. It washes so easily!

Anonymous - At 1/24/2005 08:14:45 PM, Chefsf said…
i use a “silpat” that’s made in France. It acts like parchment paper. great for cookies, or cooking with anything that’s sticky or messy-silpats don’t stick.
you can find them at novelty cooking stores-im sure you already have your favorites!, for about 20-30 bucks a pop. I love mine. I use it when baking pies for the spill over. It washes so easily!

Anonymous - At 1/25/2005 10:53:05 PM, Chefsf said…
I haven’t noticed the silpat giving off any foul odors or tastes. Have you ever baked with a baking stone or used cast iron? My silpat, I like to say, is seasoned. I wash it everytime after I use it(which you’re not supposed to do with cast iron or the baking stone).
If you go to a kitchen store or even better, a restruant supply store or if you read in the classified section of the newspaper and read the restruants going out of business, they have liquidating sales to get rid of the equimpment before the courts take over. You can find good deals on pots, pans, deli slicers, stuff like that(a little worn, but good otherwise), you can get the 1/2 and full jellyroll(cookie) sheet pans. The silpat was made for this size and not the home cookie sheet size because they originated from the industry, not from a homemaker.
Your quiche is beautiful! I will post your blog address on my blog, I haven’t figured out how to add links in yet.

Anonymous - At 1/25/2005 10:55:05 PM, Chefsf said…
oh, and thankyou for adding my blog to yours!

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